Two former leaders of China's soccer association are among eight officials and players on trial for bribery.

Courts in the northeastern province of Liaoning are hearing the cases of
Xie Yalong and his successor, Nan Yong. Xie is accused of taking $273,000 in bribes from sports equipment manufacturers, professional teams, and a former national
team coach. Nan is accused of taking at least $160,000 in bribes. Others on trial include former national team coach Wei Shaohui, former head of referees Li
Dongsheng, and four former national team players. Xie's lawyer Jin Xiaoguang told People's Daily that the defendant confessed to crimes he did not commit '"because he wanted
to stay alive."

Chinese soccer is plagued by the bribing of coaches, players and officials by gambling syndicates. New anti-graft measures, stronger finances, and the import of expensive
foreign talent have since lifted the China Super League, although current CFA boss Wei Di on Wednesday warned against backsliding.

''Lessons have been learned from the
scandals, but similar cases might happen again in the future. So we must stay vigilant all along,'' Wei said in Beijing.